UNITED NATIONS DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMME (UNDP) has floated a tender for BBRFP49702: Consultancy to Design, Build, Design, Build, Pilot and Install a Web Based Integrated Crime Management Information System. The project location is Barbados and the tender is closing on 09 Aug 2018. The tender notice number is 47725, while the TOT Ref Number is 24682541. Bidders can have further information about the Tender and can request the complete Tender document by Registering on the site.

Expired Tender

Procurement Summary

Country : Barbados

Summary : BBRFP49702: Consultancy to Design, Build, Design, Build, Pilot and Install a Web Based Integrated Crime Management Information System

Deadline : 09 Aug 2018

Other Information

Notice Type : Tender

TOT Ref.No.: 24682541

Document Ref. No. : 47725

Competition : ICB

Financier : United Nations Secretariat

Purchaser Ownership : -

Tender Value : Refer Document

Purchaser's Detail

Purchaser : UNITED NATIONS DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMME (UNDP)

Barbados

Tender Details

The United Nations Development Program (UNDP) - Regional Bureau for Latin America and the Caribbean (RBLAC) in collaboration with the UNDP Caribbean network of offices Guyana, Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago, Suriname, Barbados and the OECS undertook the formulation of a first Caribbean-wide Human Development Report (CHDR) on Citizens Security. Using Global UNDP HDR processes, analysis and methodologies, the Caribbean HDR reviewed crime and security in the Caribbean with data analysis and information from a human development perspective. The report defines short and medium term policy recommendationsbased on the social aspects of security which impact on citizen safety, youth violence, education, unemployment and inequality, inclusive economic growth, migration, and drug use and alcohol abuse.One of the primary recommendations from the report is the urgent need for the region to shift from traditional concepts of state security to a broader multidimensional concept that focuses on citizen security and safety and wellbeing of Caribbean citizens.While the CHDR victimization survey points to highlevels of fear of violent crime amongst citizens and the failing of existing policies and approaches, stimulating robust public discourse on the topic presented a challenge. Given the region s dependency on tourism as its main foreign exchange earner, enlisting the full and unconditional support of regional parliamentarians on the matter of facilitating rigorous public debate is critical. Reliable crime statistics are critical for measuring changes in crime levels, monitoring of national and regional responses, developing and evaluating effectiveness of citizen security policies, supporting the analysis and understanding of national and regional crime trends. Collection and organization of data into a statistical form is requiredto produce valuable information for use in decision-making and to allow for comparison of crime statistics across time and between countries. Lack of r...

Documents

 Tender Notice